Ah, thanks, wanted to make sure that wasn't SPAM, I am looking for
Python/GAE expertise, I'll post another message then.

Azure pricing was announced yesterday and causing me to rethink doing
Azure, I have access to a rockstar .NET programmer at a reasonable
price, so I was on the fence as I prefer GAE/Python and I used to do
Python so being able to read it is useful ;-)  Also, there are a few
GAE things I like more (like I don't have to decide when to scale or
how many instances, I just set a quota, and worker threads are only
charged when executed and not constantly when in a while loop).

So, if I had access to a rockstar Python/GAE person (or two)... at a
reasonable price, I think I'd just go GAE.  Anyone?

On Jul 15, 7:05 am, Adam <[email protected]> wrote:
> And the second part of your question: Azure vs. GAE. I'm not aware of
> any formal white papers that exist on this subject; although, I'll
> wager cash money that Microsoft has a couple in the pipeline
> somewhere. I work with both. I earn my salary being a happy trilobite
> in the Microsoft ecosystem, so I have the C# and ASP.NET skills to
> take good advantage of Azure. I'm also a hopeless Google fanatic, and
> I got on-board with GAE on day one.
>
> My analysis: Azure and AppEngine are more like each other than any of
> the other cloud computing platforms, such as Amazon's EC2. They both
> give you a new programming model -- a sandbox -- to work in that
> encourages you to architect your applications in a way that allows
> them to take advantage of the instant, no-effort, on-demand scaling
> that is the real, compelling advantage of the Cloud.
>
> They both give applications fairly generous free quotas that give the
> developer and extremely-low cost-of-entry, enabling him of her to
> build and deploy an application without up-front and.or monthly cash
> outlays. If you are lucky/smart your application can be generating
> enough revenue to more than cover its costs before you have to start
> paying for resources.
>
> The main decision point between the two platforms comes down to the
> technology that you want to use to build your web application. Do you
> have access to C# and ASP.NET skills? Azure is a good choice. Do you
> have a Python/Java open source guru handy? AppEngine is a winner.
>
> A secondary decision point might be your choice of development
> platform. The Azure SDK will install and run on Vista or Windows
> Server 2008, and you will need a Visual Studio 2008 license. On the
> other hand, you can build AppEngine applications on Windows (XP,
> Vista, 7, etc), MacOS or Linux.
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